May is Osteoporosis Awareness and Prevention Month

More than 2 Million Fractures Due to Osteoporosis Occur Each Year

Learn More about Bone Health and Your Spine

Osteoporosis weakens bones — and most often in the spine. This May, during Osteoporosis Awareness and Prevention Month, we’re raising awareness about osteoporosis and spine fractures (also known as vertebral compression fractures), which are the most common yet often overlooked fracture type associated with osteoporosis, affecting an estimated 1.5 million Americans annually.

New National Osteoporosis Awareness and Prevention Month Spine-Talks Video

To highlight the importance of osteoporosis screening, diagnosis, and treatment (and the 1.5 million spine fractures that occur each year), please see the new Spine-Talks video we have developed:

Let’s Break the Fracture Cycle

Strengthening your bones is the first line of defense. Here’s how to prevent fractures:

Every year, 2 million fragility fractures occur due to osteoporosis — yet fewer than 15% of older women have had a bone density test.

 

Regular bone density testing is a powerful tool to monitor bone health and catch problems early. In fact, one of the quality measures for Medicare Advantage plans is whether older women within six months of suffering from a fracture receive a bone density test or starts osteoporosis therapy if they have the disease.

Be proactive to help close the osteoporosis care gap.

  • 70% of spine fractures go undiagnosed due to mild or overlooked symptoms (e.g., height loss, back pain).
  • Patients who suffer from a fracture caused by osteoporosis are 5x more likely to suffer from another fracture within one year.
  • 83% of women who suffer a fracture receive no follow-up care — no diagnosis, no medication if they have osteoporosis, no plan for future fracture prevention.

If patients knew they had osteoporosis and received proper diagnosis and treatment, the risk of suffering from additional fractures would be reduced drastically.

What Are Vertebral Compression Fractures?

Your spine is made of vertebrae—like building blocks that support your body. When osteoporosis weakens these bones, they may break and then often collapse under pressure from simple movements like bending, lifting, or even coughing. These are vertebral compression fractures (VCFs). Many VCFs occur silently, with no symptoms. Others cause pain with posture changes or movement. They’re most common in the lower (thoracic) and upper (lumbar) spine and can often go undiagnosed.

2 million

fractures caused by osteoporosis occurred in Medicare patients (2015).

1.5 million

spine fractures occur annually in the U.S.

Only 1 in 3

are recognized and diagnosed.

Only 1 in 6

women diagnosed with osteoporosis received treatment.

Twenty percent

of patients with one VCF are likely to have another VCF within a year.

How Are VCFs Diagnosed?

Doctors use imaging to get a clear picture of the spine. X-rays show alignment and location of the fracture, and an MRI helps determine the age of the fracture and whether it is affecting nerves. These images also rule out other causes, like tumors.

Risk Factors to Watch For

Several conditions and lifestyle factors increase the risk of osteoporosis:

  • Low bone density (confirmed via a bone density scan)
  • Long-term steroid use
  • Post-menopausal women (low estrogen)
  • Conditions like hyperparathyroidism and chronic kidney disease

Take Action

Osteoporosis may be silent, but its impact is loud.

Don’t ignore back pain or height loss. If you’re at risk, speak with your doctor about evaluation and treatment options. If there’s a fracture after 50 — request a bone density test.

Find Out if You are at Risk for Osteoporosis.

We’ve partnered with the Bone Health and Osteoporosis Foundation to help you assess your risk.

Osteoporosis Fracture Risk Calculator

Resources on Osteoporosis

The National Spine Health Foundation offers expert resources on preventing and managing osteoporosis.


Share

Sharing what you’ve learned about bone health can help others reduce their risk.

 

What Questions Do You Have About Bone Health?

We’re here to help! Reach out to the NSHF team and have your bone health questions answered.

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Test Your Osteoporosis Risk

Find out if you’re at risk for osteoporosis and other bone conditions.

Find Out More

Citations

  • International Osteoporosis Foundation. Vertebral fractures due to osteoporosis. 2019. https://www.osteoporosis.foundation/sites/iofbonehealth/files/2019-06/Vertebral-Fracture-Factsheet_ENGLISH.pdf.
  • Delmas PD, et al. Underdiagnosis of vertebral fractures is a worldwide problem: the IMPACT study. J Bone Miner Res 2005;20:557-63.
  • Epidemiology of osteoporosis and fragility fractures. International Osteoporosis Foundation. Accessed September 2023. https://www.osteoporosis.foundation/facts-statistics/epidemiology-of-osteoporosis-and-fragility-fractures.
  • Vertebral fractures are the most common type of fracture associated with osteoporosis,⁵ yet 70% go undiagnosed because patients are asymptomatic or signs such as height loss and back pain are overlooked. and if you miss that it goes 5 times⁶ Furthermore, 83% of women who experienced a fracture received no follow-up care – no osteoporosis medication with or without a bone density test- no action to reduce the risk of the next fracture.⁷,
  • After an osteoporotic fracture, patients are five times more likely to suffer another fracture within a year.⁸ In another study, only 1 in 6 women received treatment (secondary message) why is this happening for osteoporosis within six months.⁷,

 

This NSHF National Osteoporosis Prevention Awareness Month campaign is made possible by an educational partnership from: